Tim in MD
Jet Boat Addict
- Messages
- 47
- Reaction score
- 60
- Points
- 117
- Location
- Bush River, Aberdeen, MD
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2019
- Boat Model
- AR
- Boat Length
- 21
I normally keep my boat on a lift behind my house, but at low tide (plus/minus about an hour, sometimes more), I can't get the boat off the lift (that 18" of steel and 4x6 lumber supporting the boat means that 30" of water is not enough to float my boat). When I want to go boating at 2pm and low tide is at 2:30, that's a bummer. So...I want to invest in mooring whips. The idea is that I'll get the boat off the lift when it's not low tide, it spends the day either out on the river or on the whips, and then goes back on its lift sometime in the afternoon or evening when the tide is up.
I'm on a half-mile wide river, with about 2 feet of tidal range. If the weather is supposed to be stormy, the boat will stay on the lift (although of course worst case is an unforecasted storm blows through and the tide is too low to get back on the lift). I don't expect it to ever spend the night on the whips.
My problem is the end of my pier (the only place I can do this) is only 10' wide, and my boat is 21' long. What I want to do is secure the aft cleat to one whip, the midships cleat to the other whip (with a pair of spring lines to these same cleats along with a stern line), and leave the bow uncleated. I plan to buy 5000 lb whips for my 3500 lb boat.
I've seen one post where a number of jetboaters love their whips (of the mooring kind). What are your thoughts about securing only the back half of the boat?
I'm on a half-mile wide river, with about 2 feet of tidal range. If the weather is supposed to be stormy, the boat will stay on the lift (although of course worst case is an unforecasted storm blows through and the tide is too low to get back on the lift). I don't expect it to ever spend the night on the whips.
My problem is the end of my pier (the only place I can do this) is only 10' wide, and my boat is 21' long. What I want to do is secure the aft cleat to one whip, the midships cleat to the other whip (with a pair of spring lines to these same cleats along with a stern line), and leave the bow uncleated. I plan to buy 5000 lb whips for my 3500 lb boat.
I've seen one post where a number of jetboaters love their whips (of the mooring kind). What are your thoughts about securing only the back half of the boat?